The Golem: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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This film is in the public domain. It is currently available [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5mSzcR3KcA on YouTube here].
This film is in the public domain. It is currently available [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a5mSzcR3KcA on YouTube here].

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{{tropelist}}
=== ''The Golem, How He Came Into the World'' provides examples of: ===
* [[The Apprentice (trope)|The Apprentice]]: The Famulus ([[As You Know]], 'famulus' ''means'' 'apprentice').
* [[The Apprentice (trope)|The Apprentice]]: The Famulus ([[As You Know]], 'famulus' ''means'' 'apprentice').
* [[Artificial Human]]: Though in contrast to the source legend, the non-natural origin of the movie Golem is always obvious.
* [[Artificial Human]]: Though in contrast to the source legend, the non-natural origin of the movie Golem is always obvious.
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{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]
[[Category:Silent Movie]]
[[Category:Films of the 1920s]]
[[Category:Films of the 1920s]]
[[Category:Horror Films]]
[[Category:Horror Films]]
[[Category:German Media]]
[[Category:German Films]]
[[Category:German Expressionism]]
[[Category:German Expressionism]]
[[Category:Film]]
[[Category:Film]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Golem, The}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Golem, The}}
[[Category:{{PAGENAME}}]]

Latest revision as of 01:10, 17 June 2023

Der Golem, wie er in die Welt kam (The Golem, How He Came Into The World) is a 1920 German silent horror film, co-written, co-directed, and starring Paul Wegener, about the origins of the Golem of Prague. It is one of the earliest and most influential Expressionist films and is considered a masterpiece of the German silent cinema. Wegener had produced two earlier films using the character, Der Golem (1915), a mostly lost film telling a somewhat similar story, and Der Golem und die Tänzerin (The Golem and the Dancing Girl) (1917), in which an actor (clearly Wegener playing an Expy of himself) puts on the make-up of his monster role as a prank on a dancing-girl whom he is interested in.

The film would influence later horror films profoundly, in particular James Whale's Frankenstein and The Bride of Frankenstein (as, for instance, the monster's playing with an innocent little girl).

This film is in the public domain. It is currently available on YouTube here.

Tropes used in The Golem include:
  1. Wait, does a Golem actually have muscles?